fabrication$27134$ - translation to greek
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fabrication$27134$ - translation to greek

INTENTIONAL MISREPRESENTATION OF RESEARCH RESULTS BY MAKING UP DATA, SUCH AS THAT REPORTED IN A JOURNAL ARTICLE
Drylabbing; Scientific fabrication; Fabrication (science); Fabrication of data

fabrication      
n. κατασκεύασμα, σκευωρία
white lie         
  • A motivational poster about lying declares "An [[ostrich]] only thinks he 'covers up'"
  • ''1984'' by [[George Orwell]]
  • Portrait bust]] of Aristotle made by [[Lysippos]]
  • automotive repair]] shops in California.
  • ''St. Augustine'' by [[Carlo Crivelli]]
  • Darius I, imagined by a Greek painter, fourth century BCE
  • Infographic ''How to spot fake news'' published by the [[International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions]]
  • A [[Torah scroll]] recovered from [[Glockengasse Synagogue]] in [[Cologne]]
  • date=17 May 2017 }} ''Boston University''.  Accessed 4 December 2017.</ref>
INTENTIONALLY FALSE STATEMENT TO A PERSON OR GROUP MADE BY ANOTHER PERSON OR GROUP
White lie; White Lie; Dissembling; Dissemble; Patent untruth; Lie of omission; Fibbing; Polite lie; Compound lie; Lying by omission; Behavioral signals of lying; Porky pie; Untruth; Fibster; Liar; Barefaced lie; Butler lie; Contextual lie; Emergency lie; Fabrication (lie); Fib (lie); Lying through your teeth; Lying in trade; Jocose lie; Haystack answer; Lie by omission; Communication of falsehood; Bold-faced lie; Bald-faced lie; Lying; Lying liar; Fibbed; Religious views on lying
αθώο ψεύδος

Definition

Fabrication
·noun That which is fabricated; a falsehood; as, the story is doubtless a fabrication.
II. Fabrication ·noun The act of fabricating, framing, or constructing; construction; manufacture; as, the fabrication of a bridge, a church, or a government.

Wikipedia

Data fabrication

In scientific inquiry and academic research, data fabrication is the intentional misrepresentation of research results. As with other forms of scientific misconduct, it is the intent to deceive that marks fabrication as unethical, and thus different from scientists deceiving themselves. There are many ways data can be fabricated. Experimental data can be fabricated by reporting experiments that were never conducted, and accurate data can be manipulated or misrepresented to suit a desired outcome. One of the biggest problems with this form of scientific fraud is that "university investigations into research misconduct are often inadequate, opaque and poorly conducted. They challenge the idea that institutions can police themselves on research integrity."

Sometimes intentional fabrication can be difficult to distinguish from unintentional academic incompetence or malpractice. Examples of this include the failure to account for measurement error, or the failure to adequately control experiments for any parameters being measured.

Fabrication can also occur in the context of undergraduate or graduate studies wherein a student fabricates a laboratory or homework assignment. Such cheating, when discovered, is usually handled within the institution, and does not become a scandal within the larger academic community (as cheating by students seldom has any academic significance).